Nokia?s upcoming Lumia 900 Windows Phone could be the first smartphone running Microsoft?s mobile operating system to really make a splash in the United States. BGR exclusively reported that the new flagship 4G handset will hit AT&T store shelves late next month alongside a massive marketing blitz and a big subsidy program that will leave the phone with a surprisingly low $99.99 price tag. As impressive as the Lumia 900 is shaping up to be, however, Nokia is apparently working on another smartphone with new technology that will blow us all away. Read on for more.
In an interview with Finnish newspaper Kauppalehti, Nokia design boss Marko Ahtisaari said that the company is currently working on a revolutionary new smartphone that will make other handsets seem dated.

According to the Nokia executive, Apple?s user interface on the iPhone is ?poorly designed? and convoluted. ?The road from the kitchen into the dining room is always through the front door,? Ahtisaari told Kauppalehti. Meanwhile, operating systems like Symbian and Android are described by the design veteran as ?dollhouses,? with furniture users can pick and rearrange.

Microsoft?s Windows Phone is more natural according to Ahtisaari, and the mysterious new smartphone Nokia is building will apparently push the mobile platform even further into the future.

The executive wouldn?t provide any firm details regarding the device, but he didn?t hesitate to set sky-high expectations. The phone will feature breakthrough technology that revolutionizes the user experience according to Ahtisaari, and owners will not have to bend down or even touch the screen in order to operate it.

Ahtisaari?s brief description of the technology suggests some type heads-up technology, or perhaps voice-driven controls similar to Apple?s virtual assistant Siri or Microsoft Kinect. We?re not sure how revolutionary voice controls would be be considering how widely voice command technology will be used this year, however. Nokia declined to comment.

UPDATE: A Nokia spokesperson contacted BGR with additional details regarding some of Ahtisaari?s comments. The interface elements he described during his interview are in fact concepts Ahtisaari has been discussing since December 2010, when he spoke about them on stage at LeWeb. The spokesperson declined to comment on if or when these concepts might appear in a production device.

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In an interview with Finnish newspaper Kauppalehti, Nokia design boss Marko Ahtisaari said that the company is currently working on a revolutionary new smartphone that will make other handsets seem dated.

Obviously, Marko Ahtisaari is not an adhereant to the “under-promise, overperform school of thought.

“According to the Nokia executive, Apple?s user interface on the iPhone is ?poorly designed? and convoluted.”

And this is coming from the company that gave us Symbian and Meego?

Microsoft?s Windows Phone is more natural according to Ahtisaari…

...but not according to anyone who is actually paying money in order to buy a phone…

...and the mysterious new smartphone Nokia is building will apparently push the mobile platform even further into the future.

Even further into the future? Is the current Nokia phone already in the future, because that might explain it’s lack of success in the here and now.

The executive wouldn?t provide any firm details regarding the device, but he didn?t hesitate to set sky-high expectations.

Moron.

The phone will feature breakthrough technology that revolutionizes the user experience according to Ahtisaari, and owners will not have to bend down or even touch the screen in order to operate it.

If any of this were true, then why, why, why would you be talking about it now? Keep it in your pants until you’re ready to whip it out.

UPDATE: A Nokia spokesperson contacted BGR with additional details regarding some of Ahtisaari?s comments. The interface elements he described during his interview are in fact concepts Ahtisaari has been discussing since December 2010, when he spoke about them on stage at LeWeb. The spokesperson declined to comment on if or when these concepts might appear in a production device.

I understand that their manufacturing and logistics are in tatters by now. All that’s left is IP. Once the rest of the company is destroyed, MS can buy it without paying for the bits they don’t want, and they have eliminated a player to boot.

Like RIMM, Nokia is going through a major strategic shift, with massive internal and external challenges. They have announced they will have Windows 7 phones by the end of this year. Will it matter? Why?

Like RIMM, Nokia is going through a major strategic shift, with massive internal and external challenges. They have announced they will have Windows 7 phones by the end of this year. Will it matter? Why?

Windows 7 by the end of the year??? Or did you mean Windows 8?

Never mind New guy, hadn’t seen this thread before, didn’t notice that comment was from almost a year ago…